A short teaser for a rider segment that will feature in my current DVD project.
Rhys Atkinson, Australian National Series Champion.
After Rhys left his mark on Yackandandah for the 5th round of the Kona Victorian State Downhill mountain bike Series with the best time of the weekend which bested his 2010 time of 3:29.6, with a scorching run of 3:23.6
We headed back to Yackandandah the weekend after the event to get some shots for the full length video, and this is the short to the rider segment that will feature in that full length video.
Canon 7D, 24 - 70 2.8
Rode video Mic
LCD View finder
Special thanks to Tom Riella and Elijah Marinov for help transporting equipment, and also a special thanks to Simon the property owner.

Show titles for Nat Geo's reality show, Alaska State Troopers. Completed for Austin Shaw's Multiplatform Media Brand Packaging class at SCAD.
Concepted, designed, and animated by Dan Ogren, John Hughes, William Harris, and Sarah Beth Hulver.
Footage from the original series "Alaska State Troopers" on Nat Geo.
Score by Tony Anderson - "Tension"

little explanation for those who are not aware of the events.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euromaidan#30_November_attack_on_protesters
first dummy - activist
second dummy - provoker
third dummy - journalist
final inscription: WE NEED CHANGES

Help tell Judy's story and receive a copy of TripleDivide: http://www.publicherald.org/donate/
[Excerpt from PublicHerald.org report] A Look at Drill Waste Pits and Groundwater
During the filming of Triple Divide, journalists, filmmakers, and Public Herald founders Melissa Troutman and Joshua Pribanic met Judy, a Pennsylvania resident and neighbor to a Marcellus shale natural gas well pad.
In 2007, Guardian Exploration, LLC drilled for natural gas 450 feet from Judy’s home.
The process of drilling for natural gas produces waste materials brought up from the subsurface mixed with drilling and hydraulic fracturing fluids. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) describes these wastes as “radioactive”:
Radioactive wastes from oil and gas drilling take the form of produced water, drilling mud, sludge, slimes, or evaporation ponds and pits. It can also concentrate in the mineral scales that form in pipes (pipe scale), storage tanks, or other extraction equipment. Radionuclides in these wastes are primarily radium-226, radium-228, and radon gas. The radon is released to the atmosphere, while the produced water and mud containing radium are placed in ponds or pits for evaporation, re-use, or recovery.
Read full report: http://www.publicherald.org/archives/16925/investigative-reports/energy-investigations/fracking-energy-investigations/
& for more about Triple Divide visit: http://tripledividefilm.org/#3e9/custom_plain